The eviction came with the same casual detachment as someone reading the morning forecast.
“Emily, pack your things.”
My mother, Margaret, didn’t even look up from the granite counter. She stirred cream into her coffee with mechanical precision, the spoon tapping lightly against the mug.
I stood frozen in the kitchen doorway. Twenty-five years old, five months pregnant, my body already worn down. I wore an oversized, faded army-green t-shirt that had once belonged to my husband, my hands instinctively resting over the small curve of my stomach.
“What are you talking about?” I asked, my voice rough.
My mother pointed toward the stairs without emotion. “Your sister, Ashley, and her husband are moving in today. They need your room for Ryan’s office and gaming setup. You’ll be staying in the garage now.”
For a moment, my mind simply stalled.
“The garage? Mom, it’s November. There’s no heat out there. I’m pregnant.”
My father, Thomas, folded his newspaper slowly at the dining table and looked at me with tired irritation.
“You don’t contribute anything to this house, Emily,” he said. “Since Ethan died, all you’ve done is sit in that room staring at your computer. This isn’t a charity.”
Ethan. Even hearing his name felt like a wound reopening.
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